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Today marks death anniversary of Armenian National Hero Movses Gorgisyan

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 19 2022

SOCIETY 12:27 19/01/2022 ARMENIA

Today, January 19, marks the death anniversary of National Hero of Armenia Movses Gorgisyan.

Movses Gorgisyan (1961-1990) was a politician and one of the leaders of the Nagorno-Karabakh movement. He was one of the founders of the Army of Independence. Widely known for his speeches on the independence of Armenia, he was also an active advocate of Artsakh's independence campaign.

Born in Yerevan, Gorgisyan graduated from the Department of Culture of the Armenian State Pedagogical University in 1984, with the qualification of a stage director and producer. In 1986-1987 he worked at the Theatre of Goris. In 1987, he joined the national movement, becoming a member of the Union for National Self-Determination.

Gorgisyan led the demonstrations for independence in Yerevan, being jailed in 1988. He was also an editor of the Armenian edition of Glasnost magazine. Gorgisyan was the first person to hoist Armenia's tricolor flag on 28 May 1988 for the first time. This was the same day the First Republic of Armenia was founded 70 years prior.

In late 1989, Gorgisyan and several other members of the Union for National Self-Determination founded the Army of Independence, an armed group which engaged in violent clashes with the Soviet and Soviet Azerbaijani authorities in the Armenian SSR and the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.

Gorgisyan was killed in a battle with Azerbaijani forces attacking border villages in Ararat Province on 19 January 1990 and was buried at Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex.

He posthumously received the highest title in Armenia, the National Hero of Armenia award.

Between New York and Tehran

The Davidkhanian Mansion on Sepah Street, now owned by the Iranian government (Courtesy of H.D. Wright)

Nuclear negotiations between the US and Iran recently resumed. It is unclear if the talks will lead to a mutually beneficial agreement or come to represent yet another step backwards in the historically fraught US-Iranian relationship.

Far before these two great nations first sat down at the negotiating table in 2015, my mother’s family, originally from Armenia, served Persia. The Davidkhanians played a leading role in the modernization of the Persian state, occupying posts in politics, diplomacy, and the military since the Great Game. When the Pahlavis replaced the Qajars in 1925, my family continued to serve, setting aside partisan loyalties in service of the greater Persian nation.

At roughly the same time in history on the other side of the world, my father’s family set sail for the New World. Upon arrival, they built homes in New England. One ancestor, William Brewster, served as the religious leader of the Plymouth colony.

Over two centuries later, these two realities came into contact, a miracle only possible in the nation of immigrants. My great-grandparents left Iran for New York in 1944, my grandmother in tow. My mother was born just over two decades later and grew up in the New York apartment where Lois Lane interviews Superman, all the while dreaming of Iran. In 1991, she met my father, a recent graduate of Columbia University, on a blind date. Soon after, my twin sister and I were born, at the confluence of these two worlds.

Growing up, I visited the places that represent the American part of my identity, but Iran has always remained distant, invisible and unknowable.

I hope that one day I can see what my grandmother saw on Avenue Pahlavi as she was ferried out by a British military escort. I hope that one day I can visit the graves of my ancestors at St. George’s in the Armenian quarter of Isfahan.

I want to visit the portraits of my ancestors in the Vank Cathedral. I want to visit the house on Sepah Street where my great-grandparents lived. I want to see the baths behind the house, where thousands of Armenians came to bathe, free from the pollution of religious persecution. I want to walk around the lily pond where Reza Shah and Alexander Khan strode arm in arm, if it is still there.

I want to see it all.

I have tried to uncover what I can about the places my ancestors inhabited, but the vast majority of Iranian archives are inaccessible to the American expatriate. The US State Department has long cautioned Americans from visiting them in person.

All I have now are snapshots of history, moments frozen in time, that have led me to these dreams. Each generation, my family’s history slips closer to oblivion. If we fail to repair the fractured relationship, our shared history could be lost forever.

Amidst the chaos of international politics, it is easy to lose sight of the consequences of enmity. My family’s fragmented relationship with Iran is but one example of loss among many. The diaspora is enormous, and each family has lost something sacred.

Although the nuclear deal offers a rare opportunity for dialogue between the US and Iran, it will not bring us closer to recovering the history that is at risk of being lost, nor will it repair the relationship that has been damaged. The nuclear deal is yet another example of the US strong-arming Iran into serving national interests, just as they have done since 1953 when the C.I.A. deposed PM Mohammad Mossadegh.

Until the US sees Iran as a partner rather than an adversary to be manipulated and exploited, true progress will remain elusive.

H.D. Wright is a writer from New York City and the editor of Transnational Politics.


United States welcomes Armenian-Turkish dialogue

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 11:54,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. The United States welcomes the first meeting between the Armenian and Turkish special envoys in Moscow.

“We warmly welcome the Armenian-Turkish dialogue and the involvement of the two countries in diplomacy and dialogue for resolving existing disagreements between each other,” the U.S. State Department told the Voice of America’s Armenian service when asked to present Washington’s position over the Armenian-Turkish dialogue.

Washington and Ankara discuss normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Jan 10 2022

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and Turkish Presidential Spokesman Ibrahim Kalin discussed the normalization process between Ankara and Yerevan.

According to Sabah, the sides discussed bilateral political and economic ties and the development of security cooperation during their telephone conversation. The sides discussed the details of the joint strategic mechanism agreed upon between Turkey and the US.

There was an exchange of views on the Ukrainian crisis, protests in Kazakhstan, the process of normalizing relations with Armenia, events in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Ethiopia.

"The process of normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia and the contribution to the establishment of permanent peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia to the stability and prosperity of the region was assessed. It was also stressed that Turkey is determined to continue its role in ensuring peace and stability in the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa," the statement said.

 Kalin said that the Ukrainian crisis must be resolved through dialogue and cooperation and that Turkey is ready to contribute to this in every possible way.

Sides said that the early stabilization of the situation in Kazakhstan is important for peace and stability in the region.

Sports: UEFA: Arsen Zakharyan one of the most promising football players

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Jan 10 2022

UEFA presented the 40 most promising young football players (under 21), to watch for in 2022, according to the organization's website.

The list was compiled by experts and journalists on the official UEFA website.

Among the 40 players are also Dinamo Moscow and Russia national team midfielder Arsen Zakharyan, Barcelona midfielders Gavi and Nico Gonzalez, Salzburg striker Karim Adeyemi, Liverpool midfielder Harvey Elliott and Arsenal midfielder Emile Smith Rowe.

Retailers in Armenia banned from displaying tobacco products to public

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 11:44, 3 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 3, ARMENPRESS. A law banning retailers and restaurants from publicly displaying cigarettes and other tobacco products (including e-cigarettes) to the general public has entered into force January 1.

Ruling Civil Contract party lawmaker and former Minister of Healthcare Arsen Torosyan said in a statement that this law passed parliament back in early 2020 in a move aimed at preventing and reducing the health hazards from smoking.

“The full implementation of these regulations will gradually, significantly reduce tobacco use in our country, which will significantly improve our population’s health and economic development,” Torosyan said, warning businesses to strictly adhere to the law and calling on inspection agencies to supervise.

“There can’t be a strong economy without a healthy society,” Torosyan said, reminding that a smoking ban in restaurants and other public food facilities (both indoor and outdoor) will enter force from March 15.

COVID-19: Armenian CDC reports 88 new cases, 5 deaths

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 11:18, 29 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. 88 new cases of COVID-19 were recorded in the last 24 hours, bringing the total cumulative number of confirmed cases to 344,737, the Armenian National Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

Total recoveries – 331,152 (+125)

Tests administered – 2,553,654 (+ 6788)

Total death toll – 7961 (+5)

Active cases – 4123

Erdogan opens major automobile tunnel between Turkey and South Caucasus through Georgian territory

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan has opened transport communication between Turkey and the South Caucasus through Georgian territory, emphasizing that this automobile tunnel will link the countries and their economies in the region, Hurriyet reports.

“This automobile tunnel will contribute to the development of Erzurum and Ardvin as two major tourist destinations. This will also ease transit traffic to the Caucasus through these two cities,” Erdogan said in a video message on the occasion of the opening of the automobile tunnel.

The 2,246 km-long tunnel stretches from Uzundere province of Erzurum to Georgia through the bordering Ardvin city. It is expected that the investment will increase trade-economic activity between the countries of the region and will engage tourists.

According to Erdogan, the automobile tunnel will replace the old and very hazardous mountain pass, adding that the government will save nearly 18,000,000 Turkish liras thanks to the road tunnel.

Artsakh ombudsman’s report disseminated as official document in UN

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 28 2021

The report of Artsakh’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Gegham Stepanyan on “Malicious Prosecution by Azerbaijan of Captured Armenian Servicemen and Civilians” was disseminated as an official document in the United Nations, Stepanyan said on Facebook on Tuesday.

The report is available here. https://undocs.org/A/76/581?fbclid=IwAR2FhHGSDqx2NqFs-fmKVeRGcK2dnuPoniY5SZnFtzvIGQvcb_JAPtA2n3k

Azerbaijani Press: Is Armenian president pushing his country to yet another war?

Azer News, Azerbaijan
Dec 23 2021

By political analyst Fuad Akhundov

The Armenian president has territorial claims for foreign lands once again.

There was this hit in the 80s, which went: “What does it cost to build a house? We will draw it and we’ll live!” Armenia decided that they can draw a map with the same ease, as well as announce foreign territories their own. In any case, Armenian President Armen Sarkissian's interview with  Asia Times leads to such conclusions.

A reminder that the Armenian president stated: “I was recently on a state visit to Italy. As part of it, I visited the University of Bologna and was on a very interesting tour of the library where they presented us with some of the old Armenian manuscripts that they had. There was very interesting material – an old map of the 16th or early 17th century depicting Armenian cultural and religious centres. The composers of the map actually based it on two places: Jerusalem and Constantinople. The map encompasses modern Turkey, modern Armenia, partially covers places in Iran up to Isfahan and other places. It also shows Nagorno-Karabakh with hundreds of medieval Armenian churches and cultural centres”.  

Here is an explanation. First of all, among many forms of lies, there is this one: to tell something that seems to be the truth but so that the interlocutor misunderstands. Mr Sarkissian is trying to attempt a somewhat identical trick. He refers to the map of "Armenian cultural and religious centres", not Armenia as a state.

Moreover, if Mr Sarkissian also visited libraries in his native Yerevan. And would read the second volume of A.D. Papazyan's book "Persian Documents of Matenadaran", published by the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR back in 1968. And there are papers where signed by the Armenian Catholicos, it is indicated that Echmiadzin and the surrounding lands are in Azerbaijan and there is no Armenia there.

So, one of the Catholicos points out that Vagharshapat is "one-third of a whole village called Uchkilsa from the villages of nakhne'Kyarbi, which is located in the country of Azerbaijan …". The document is dated 1428, and, as you can see, it directly says that the village of Uchkilsa, the very one that is today called Echmiadzin, is located in Azerbaijan.

Or one more document: when buying two years later the next land in the deed of sale for the village of Uchkilsa, renamed by the Armenians to Vagharshapat, and the monastery of the same name – in Echmiadzin, from 1430 it is said that Saru (Sary) Melik, the attorney of Sheikh Said-bek al-Sa 'Di, sold a third of the village of Uchkilsa, which was subordinate to the country of Azerbaijan in the Chukhur Sa'd vilayet to the patriarch of the noble Christian religion, the mutavalli of Uchkilsa, caliph Grigor. And there are many such examples. 

Furthermore, there really are ancient Christian churches and monasteries in Karabakh, but they aren’t Armenian, they are Albanian. And it is clearly written on the walls of Gandzasar monastery, which is even considered to be the main Christian centre of Karabakh, that this church was built under the patriarchate of the Albanian Catholicos. These are the very inscriptions that Academician Orbeli deciphered.

And if one wants more modern evidence, then the famous Russian film director Karen Shakhnazarov and his talks that his ancestors, in fact, were Christian Turks, and that Karabakh was never part of Armenia can be remembered.

On the other hand, the map of “religious and cultural centres” which the Armenian president refers to doesn’t prove anything at all. Armenians lived in many large cities of Persia, the Ottoman Empire, and even India. They had their own schools, churches and monasteries even back then. Today, Armenian cultural and religious centres can be easily found in Buenos Aires, Los Angeles, and Marseille, not counting Tehran or Baghdad. So what – to consider Argentina a part of Armenia?

And, finally, if this map, in the idea of Armen Sarkissian, has to confirm Armenia’s claims to Karabakh, does it mean that tomorrow on its basis, Armenia will present claims to the territory of Iran, right up to Isfahan? And how does he think Iran has to react to such “historical” calculations? 

But in the case of the Bologna manuscripts, Mr Sarkissian at least tries to preserve the semblance of decency and "secures himself" so that he is not openly caught by his tongue. But caution does not last long, and then the Armenian president declares as if “Comrade Stalin, who was a 'great master' of reshaping borders, in fact, a great master of creating problems between nations, including between Armenia and Azerbaijan, has given Karabakh and Nakhchivan to Azerbaijan back then. Because the Soviets wanted to help create a common border between Azerbaijan and Turkey since Turkish leader Ataturk was considered a great friend of Bolshevik Russia ".

And this right here is an explicit lie. First of all, in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia of 1926, in the article “The Armenian question” it is clearly written that in 1918 Armenia declared war on Azerbaijan making territorial claims to Karabakh and Nakhchivan, as well as on Georgia about Ahalkalaki and Borchalo. That is, in 1918, Karabakh was a part of Azerbaijan, but how, then, in 1921, the Caucasus Bureau could transfer it to Azerbaijan? That is why the Caucasus Bureau considered this issue but decided to LEAVE it as part of Azerbaijan. Leave, not hand over. Since, as opposed to 1918, in 1921 Armenia decided to peacefully request to have Karabakh transferred to them, but it was refused and it was left as part of Azerbaijan. And it is unlikely that Sarkissian really does not understand the difference.

Most importantly, that there is not a word about the need to respect the borders recognized by the world community, abandon claims to foreign territories and learn to live in peace with neighbours in the entire voluminous text. And even talking about the 44-day war that Armenia lost Mr Sarkissian doesn’t dare to say that Armenia should give up on aggression.  

Or maybe Sarkissian does not understand that he is pushing his country to yet another war? And now, obviously, without a chance of winning.